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The Journal of Experimental Medicine logoLink to The Journal of Experimental Medicine
. 1993 Feb 1;177(2):567–571. doi: 10.1084/jem.177.2.567

The inability to process a self-peptide allows autoreactive T cells to escape tolerance

PMCID: PMC2190887  PMID: 8381158

Abstract

It is now clear that antigen presenting cells (APCs) do not present all the possible peptides of self-proteins to the immune system. When then, is the fate of T cells specific for those self-peptides that escape processing? In this study, the COOH-terminal peptide (residues 81-104) of self cytochrome c (cyt c) elicited strong autoimmune T cells, as well as autoantibodies specific for this immunogen. These T cells did not respond to stimulation with the whole self cyt c molecule, demonstrating that APCs cannot process and present the self 81-104 peptide. Whereas mice were unresponsive to immunization with the whole mouse cyt c molecule, the mouse 81-104 fragment together with the whole self-molecule induced and amplified the autoimmune T cell response to sites within the 1-80 peptide. T cells that never contact the relevant self-peptide are functionally ignorant. They do not become tolerized or deleted, nor do they normally participate in immune responses to the native whole self-protein, since APCs cannot present the 81-104 peptide.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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